Culture and crisis communication : the use of intercultural communication in public relations crisis management planning

This study set out to explore how multinational corporations incorporated the issue of culture into the planning process for crisis management. The research used a case study method with unstructured interviews conducted via email, phone and in person, and focused on the U.S. and Japan. Four of the...

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Main Author: Martin, Damion R.
Format: Others
Published: Scholarly Commons 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/uop_etds/787
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1786&context=uop_etds
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spelling ndltd-pacific.edu-oai-scholarlycommons.pacific.edu-uop_etds-17862021-10-05T05:13:44Z Culture and crisis communication : the use of intercultural communication in public relations crisis management planning Martin, Damion R. This study set out to explore how multinational corporations incorporated the issue of culture into the planning process for crisis management. The research used a case study method with unstructured interviews conducted via email, phone and in person, and focused on the U.S. and Japan. Four of the interview subjects were established public relations professionals with experience in both countries, and one subject is a professor of intercultural communications in Japan. All interviews were transcribed and approved by the interview subjects before being analyzed and catalogued into themes. Those themes were then reviewed compared to the intercultural communications theoretical framework of power distance, high-context vs. low-context communications, and individualism vs. collectivism. Results revealed three main themes, including differences in PR between Japan and the United States, belief that culture should play a more substantial role in crisis communications, and actual use of culture in crisis communications. Responses showed that, regardless of a collective belief that culture should play a substantial role in crisis r;;- management, intercultural communication components often take over in emergencies. In conclusion, while all interview subjects saw value in cultural response, the broad scope of what that entails made it an impractical endeavor. Further, responses showed that the planning stage is not the most effective place to integrate culture into crisis communication. Research did suggest, however, that an updated PR model, adapted from the R.A.C.E. method, that incorporates elements of cultural communication consideration between the Action Planning and Communication stages could beneficial. 2011-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/uop_etds/787 https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1786&context=uop_etds University of the Pacific Theses and Dissertations Scholarly Commons Public relations Cross-cultural studies Crisis management Intercultural communication Japan Intercultural communication Corporations Public relations Business Communication Organizational Behavior and Theory
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Public relations Cross-cultural studies
Crisis management
Intercultural communication Japan
Intercultural communication
Corporations Public relations
Business
Communication
Organizational Behavior and Theory
spellingShingle Public relations Cross-cultural studies
Crisis management
Intercultural communication Japan
Intercultural communication
Corporations Public relations
Business
Communication
Organizational Behavior and Theory
Martin, Damion R.
Culture and crisis communication : the use of intercultural communication in public relations crisis management planning
description This study set out to explore how multinational corporations incorporated the issue of culture into the planning process for crisis management. The research used a case study method with unstructured interviews conducted via email, phone and in person, and focused on the U.S. and Japan. Four of the interview subjects were established public relations professionals with experience in both countries, and one subject is a professor of intercultural communications in Japan. All interviews were transcribed and approved by the interview subjects before being analyzed and catalogued into themes. Those themes were then reviewed compared to the intercultural communications theoretical framework of power distance, high-context vs. low-context communications, and individualism vs. collectivism. Results revealed three main themes, including differences in PR between Japan and the United States, belief that culture should play a more substantial role in crisis communications, and actual use of culture in crisis communications. Responses showed that, regardless of a collective belief that culture should play a substantial role in crisis r;;- management, intercultural communication components often take over in emergencies. In conclusion, while all interview subjects saw value in cultural response, the broad scope of what that entails made it an impractical endeavor. Further, responses showed that the planning stage is not the most effective place to integrate culture into crisis communication. Research did suggest, however, that an updated PR model, adapted from the R.A.C.E. method, that incorporates elements of cultural communication consideration between the Action Planning and Communication stages could beneficial.
author Martin, Damion R.
author_facet Martin, Damion R.
author_sort Martin, Damion R.
title Culture and crisis communication : the use of intercultural communication in public relations crisis management planning
title_short Culture and crisis communication : the use of intercultural communication in public relations crisis management planning
title_full Culture and crisis communication : the use of intercultural communication in public relations crisis management planning
title_fullStr Culture and crisis communication : the use of intercultural communication in public relations crisis management planning
title_full_unstemmed Culture and crisis communication : the use of intercultural communication in public relations crisis management planning
title_sort culture and crisis communication : the use of intercultural communication in public relations crisis management planning
publisher Scholarly Commons
publishDate 2011
url https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/uop_etds/787
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1786&context=uop_etds
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